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tv   The Five  FOX News  August 11, 2017 12:00am-1:00am PDT

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not a security threat. i will be back tomorrow. tucker will be back on monday. and the sworn enemy of flying, pomposity, smugness, and you can check me out online. "the five" are alive! ♪ >> jesse: hello, everybody. i am jesse watters, along with kimberly guilfoyle, dana perino, greg gutfeld. 9:00 in new york city. this is "the five." ♪ president trump turning up the heat. a doubling down on the fire and fury warning to north korea. threatening to fire missiles towards the base in orem. >> frankly the people who were questioning that was it too tough, maybe it was not tough enough. they've been doing this to our country for a long time. many years. and it is about time that somebody stuck up for the people of this country and for the
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people of other countries. so if anything, maybe that was not tough enough. >> jesse: later this afternoon, the president continued his tough talk sending a strong message to dictator kim jong un. >> he has disrespected our country greatly. he has said things that are horrific. and with me, he is not getting away with it. i've read about square in guam by august 15th, let's see what he does with guam. if he does something in guam, it will be in the event the likes of which nobody has seen before what will happen in north korea. >> when you say that, what do you mean? >> you will see. and he will see. he will see. it is not a deer. it is a statement. it is nothing to do with dare. it is a statement. he is not going to threaten guam and the united states, and he is not going to threaten japan and
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he is not going to threaten south korea. >> jesse: guam finding itself in a big game of chicken between the two man. he is really setting himself up for a serious situation next week. so if missiles are fired near the waters off of guam, the president has to respond very dramatically. >> dana: that's what he says. it's interesting, because of people, even general jack keane when he was on this show. he said that he wishes he could give the president a do over on the fire and fury statement. but the presidents instincts are slightly different. he is speaking to people in america who are like, what? i like strength. when president bush said, bring them on, dead or alive. and the media went to, oh, my gosh, he is a warmonger. i remember saying, i'm with that. it makes sense to me. on the guam piece, it is interesting. is it guam because kim jong un does not have the capability to
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send a missile anywhere else? but why would you waste an opportunity on guam if you do not know if president trump is going to act, why would you do that? i think that calculation is strange, but one of the experts we had on the story believes that kim jong un has given us the playbook and going to run it. he expects her to be an attack. >> jesse: if missiles are fired off of the coast of guam, kimberly, i think it is about 1e target edifice of the united states has to act very decisively. what would be the appropriate response? >> kimberly: i think the problem is even if you let it go to that point, we have waited too long. if you're going to try to intercept at that point of maximum velocity from north korea, that we are already about operating at a disadvantage. we have very limited options available to try and avert disaster.
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i think what president trump is talking about is something that, you know, i guess the precursor that would preempt it and not allow it to get to that situation where the advantage is with north korea. i don't think he will give up the advantage of the united states and our positioning. that's why he is doubling down. everybody was upset about fire and pure fury, but he is like, i'm going to back the words out. and his head, in fact, maybe that was not strong enough. >> dana: the united states does not have to attack. japan and china will be closer. >> kimberly: better tactical advantage. >> jesse: how do you feel about the president's strong advantage customer >> i give him a tremendous amount of credit for the early diplomatic move. at the fact that he was able to get a 15-0 resolution was a huge win for the united states and a huge win for him personally. i'm a little bit nervous about
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some of the rhetoric now. and you know, thinking back to my old international relations classes back when i was in college, one of the things that really stuck with me was the rational actor theory. when it comes to international relations, it's like one big chess game. every move you make is predicated on the notion that the other side is going to react rationally. i think that can be said about almost every country in the world except for north korea. he thinks that he may be speaking a language that the north korean dictator can understand, but there is no telling how this guy interprets this. he may not internalize it the way they are to you or i as rational actors or any other foreign head of state would do it. that makes me a little bit nervous. we are dealing with an incredibly unpredictable volatile person who now has nukes. it is tricky. i'm not sure that doubling down and tripling down is the way to turn the corner. >> jesse: so you believe on the screen, he might have a
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death wish and does not care about survival, what do you think about the hermit kingdom, greg gutfeld? >> greg: i think it is a great name for a ban. donald trump, it is repressuring rhetoric, but i disagree with mo, i think it is important to speak their language. because you are seeing negotiations and blessing. you wonder why he chose guam, because it is a bluff. i believe it is a bluff. and i'm going to say something different that people might get angry about. there is room for sympathy for north korea, and here's why. the korean war ended in a divorce. south korea got the greatest parent ever, the united states. we love them, we protect them, we care for them. to the consequences, the result is a massively successful economy, south korea had a great parent. what parent did north korea get? tommy's, china and the ussr.
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they did not want to take care of them, they did not feed them, they were terrible parents. and the reason why as they were scared of north korea becoming successful, so they treated them like crap. what does a child do? it's a natural way of thinking, survival is in. discard child revolves with acting. he knows it's going get ruined. the solution is how do you help this child that has been screwed by a terrible parents for 40 years? realizes that it must bluff its way to survival. he realizes that it needs nuclear weapons to survive and who are we to say "no." and i'm beginning to think who are we to say it if you have been treated like that for so long. there is a way to negotiate if you understand for the past four decades everybody has great
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stuff, but they have been stagnant in a permeated mass forever, essentially a mold that has never gone malignant. they realize this is their way. whenever things get bad, they act up. it is their way of defending themselves. it is a pathetic world. >> kimberly: but i would say it is kim jong un, not the people of north korea. they are their victims. it is somebody wayward and trying -- a narcissist. >> greg: it's the only way the family knows how to do this. >> jesse: how do you give him an off ramp where he saves face and does not fire missiles? >> dana: rex tillerson a string that as well. we are talking with one voice, i don't think that they are necessarily thinking that president trump is off on one place and mattis on the other. rex tillerson is saying the theme from three different people, and that rex tillerson
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is the one saying, there is a way for you to get back to get right with us. you can choose that, but we are not going to molly coddle you. we are better parents. interesting about rational theory, somebody like qaddafi. he is to what happened to saddam hussein, and he was like, okay, please take a way nuclear weapons, and their other players, iran has chosen a different path. they have a different situation. this one is different in that their problem is that they are a child that is now a threat to innocent people in the united states. so we cannot be a good parent to them. we have to protect ourselves. >> jesse: by protecting ourselves, we have depending on ramp for them to save face and return back into their dark existence, because it is a dark world that they live in. and it will be a permanently dark world for those people, but the only way that they think they can survive. >> mo: we also need to get the other parent to step up though.
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that's the thing. of china, it's almost cliche, but china is the key. if they were part of the problem that helped get us to this place, then it is time that they step up. >> jesse: kimberly, what do you think the prospects are of china coming to save this thing from disaster? >> kimberly: strong. >> jesse: you do? >> kimberly: yes, i do. i don't think they have any choice but to get involved and not just in the rhetorical way. >> greg: president -- meeting with senator mcconnell in order to pass the health care bill. and the two men up next. ♪ growing up, we were german. we danced in a german dance group. i wore lederhosen. when i first got on ancestry i was really surprised that i wasn't finding all of these germans in my tree. i decided to have my dna tested through ancestry dna. the big surprise was we're not german at all. 52% of my dna comes from scotland and ireland.
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it combines america's largest, most reliable 4g lte with the most wifi hotspots nationwide. saving you money wherever you check your phone. yeah, even there. see how much you can save when you choose by the gig or unlimited. call, or go to xfinitymobile.com. xfinity mobile. it's a new kind of network designed to save you money. ♪ >> dana: president trump is stepping up his criticism of mitch mcconnell. the chief national correspondent all the way with developments from the white house. and i got to your title right this time. give it to us straight. >> in remarks to the golf club today, president trump was very direct and blunt in saying that he is disappointed in the
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performance of senate majority leader mitch mcconnell saying that a bill to repeal and replace obamacare should have been on his desk week one, maybe even day one of the new administration. and in a private phone call, the president was even harder sure, not just going after him about his performance, but very upset about the speech that mitch mcconnell gave in kentucky at a rotary club where mcconnell basically said that because of the president's lack of political experience, he is suffering from excessive expectation about exactly what congress can do with his agenda. yesterday and today the president has also fired off a series of tweets going after mcconnell directly including one this afternoon which he said... a couple of hours later reporters press the president on
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comments by sean hannity and other conservatives that if mcconnell cannot get the job done, maybe he should simply step aside and resign as leader. >> well, i will tell you what, if he does not get to repeal and replace done, and he does not get taxes done, meaning cuts and reform, and if he does not get an easy one to get done, infrastructure. if he does not get them done, then you can ask me that question. >> by the bottom line on the president raising a temperature on all of this is that he stuck with mcconnell at least for now in terms of shepherding the legislative agenda. and if special counsel robert murrell are turning up the heat on the russian investigation the president is going to need as many allies as he can get on the hill. and you heard more be going from greg, i simply don't care, i know that viewers listen closely to my reports in order to stay woke. [laughter] >> dana: a very good, ed.
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we love to have you. i used to say addition is better than subtraction. and public criticism is never necessarily good. but i think this is pretty mild from mitch mcconnell. i think if you see how he said it as the media reports that, it's got all buckled up. >> jesse: yes, blown out of proportion. escalated pretty quickly like a hot air balloon. first of all, we know, i think i got taken out of proportion in terms of what mitch mcconnell was saying. but as it relates to the president, he does not like anything like that of any note nature. if you're going to poke at him a little bit, he is going to punch hard back at you. he does not tolerate it well. he has no time for it. he is no good for it. so it is not helpful in any regard, what i would like to see is all the effort put into health care. and to getting immigration reform and tax reform and all the little things that we need
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to get done. so it does not seem like that's working relationship is working so well. >> dana: i think it is not that bad. but jessie, mitch mcconnell does need president trump's help in order to get tech support them done. and on tax of form, unlike with health care web form, already a plan. the president will be out there and blue states -- red states where they have blue government so that they can press them, and they have a communications plan to see it through. >> jesse: yes, i like how trump is treating him like an employee, hey, mitch, get those reports and five, otherwise you are fired. you understand why the president expected obamacare to be repealed and replaced. because republicans promised for years to repeal and replace obamacare. the president expected him to do his job. he did not do his job. now you may be out of a job. president clinton, he might not have the leadership anymore. if there is -- people rising up.
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and that was a threat. i think the president delivered a strong one. when bill clinton was president in the second term, he did not have either house and he signed bills. president bush had a divided house and senate. he signed big bills. obama hired both houses, he signed bills immediately. he cannot get a bill on his desk, so it is sad? and he is running against congress, republicans, the swamp. when the swamp delivers, credits, and when it doesn't, he will get away from the stench and points his finger. it is smart politically. >> dana: all this is happening while the democrats are actually losing ground. and they have not been able to bounce back after november, so as bad as the republicans might look today on the day of fighting, democrats doing worse? >> mo: no, i think there a lot of democrats right now that are
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quietly cheering the president on in this fight. right? the more that the senate looks like it is not doing anything. and the more -- the better it is for democrats who are running in 2018. so there is a little bit of counterproductivity going on here. but i will say, i agree completely with jesse's point. this is exactly politically what donald trump wants. this is not a partisan fight. >> jesse: we are going to back him up. you are making a lot of sense. >> mo: probably the last time i will say i agree with you. but he is running against a system coming into that is democrats and republican, the judiciary, the media, and the congress. >> dana: about checks and balances, it continues to work. but if people thought the republic was going to fall apart, but the course will say, and the congress gets the say. and the president gets mad. that is normal. >> mo: how is this a big story when we already understand donald trump with the conversational bluntness in the fact that he basically says what he thinks, and exactly what he
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said is what his builders think. so he is basically reflecting, he is not changing. he is never going to change. and he and mcconnell are like a married couple. they bicker, one is loud prior to the other one rolls their eyes. but they stick together. period >> kimberly: like the honeymooners? >> greg: yes, they are. i think they need each other, and i do think it was a little bit overblown. i think he was answering a question. >> dana: who leaked the contents of the phone call? i bet i could figure it out. the president wanted to get back on the base, he is back on the page today in a very big way. i like that he has talked to the press pit i want him to do a press conference. that's why he should do more of it. >> kimberly: i totally agree. he makes the case for himself. he does it at his rallies. and you see him a little bit. >> greg: he is better when he
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is sitting down. i don't know what it is. >> kimberly: is that what you decided? maybe he is a little bit more measured. >> greg: he does not feel rushed, for some reason. i have pink eye and i observe that. >> dana: i know, but you are going to be okay. >> kimberly: thank god you are here and totally creeping me out. >> dana: when we return, new details after that ice has terror plot to take down a plane. other terrorist getting better about circumventing national security. greg has that, you're not going to want to miss it. stay tuned. ♪ whoooo. you're searching for something. like the perfect deal... ...on the perfect hotel. so wouldn't it be perfect if... ....there was a single site... ...where you could find the... ...right hotel for you at the best price? there is. because tripadvisor now compares... ...prices from over 200 booking... ...sites ...to save you up to 30%... ...on the hotel you want. trust this bird's words. tripadvisor. the latest reviews. the lowest prices.
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♪ >> greg: as we've right over north korea, we miss a story way scarier. isis plan to bomb a jetliner, a sophisticated plot. plastic explosives, air mail into luggage before the baggage
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was abandoned prior to airport security. apparently this was a sophisticated device ship from turkey. through security probably by air cargo. authorities discovering the plot from a tip weeks after to summarize in one word, yikes. this is the real battle as we wipe out isis in terror hotbeds, now fanning out. all it takes is one free agent, i dirty bomb, and 9/11 will look like a fire. they are plotting, so as isis handbooks teach the stuff to recruits, what is our move? the arrested plotters are siblings recruited by another brother, and isis, terrorism is an intimate lunch, we should look at them all. i said it before, radical islam mary's terror, new technology. they have are of and eight learn fast. even though they are here, we don't know why, they will adjust and keep at it. we must do the same. we always knew plastic explosives are coming. we better make sure that we can detect them even in air cargo.
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so i am thinking on september 10th, 2001, you could probably find a ton of stories on north korea, but few on bin laden. a lot has changed since then. 16 years ago it was a judge and a box cutter, now we have drones, biotech, plastics page so if you are sleepless over north korea coming you are doing it wrong. that should keep you up instead. after all, we can find north korea on a map. dana, you are a political person in 2000, the election, how much was al qaeda mentioned? >> dana: he always been this amazing pit in the entire campaign, neither al gore nor george bush were asked a question about al qaeda. interestingly on september 10th, 2001, the white house communications team was there late at night until 10:00 p.m., a big crisis, front page story, really worried about it. and the topic was the cheney energy task force. something totally nonconsequential to the big
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picture. as isis loses territory, the online empire is growing. with plastics and 3d printing, i think president trump should oversee an intel surge, because we need a lot more people out there with eyes and ears and informing on people like the brothers. >> greg: from "the wall street journal" a lot of the information came, the professor at university said that the bomb materials debated all security measures via air travel, mo, this is scary? you only hear that in the three stooges. [laughter] >> mo: no, it is. and the fact that the whole notion of nation states has completely eroded -- >> greg: that's why we think north korea is rational compared to this. >> mo: with the rapidly changing technology that all of us are struggling to keep up with. it all adds to what is scary. i think there are a couple of things that we ought to do.
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i agree with dana, invest heavily in intelligence. there is an economic component. put economic pressure on those countries that are giving safe haven. but also helping to change the economic dynamic that is helping to drive some people. creating some of the despair. third, i think that there is obviously a military component to this. we need to pursue. and there is a diplomatic component. we need to engage the islamic countries. >> greg: hijackers as 9/11, they were not poor. you know, there isn't. by the young people that are being drawn are feeling a tremendous amount of despair. >> greg: i'm thinking moral poverty. spilling moral and economic poverty. absolutely. you can have a great job and still want to kill everybody to get 72 virgins. that is moral poverty in my view. >> mo: my point is that all of these are different pieces to a broader puzzle. there is no singular answer.
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>> greg: what do you think, kim? >> kimberly: i think it is a multifaceted approach that has to be successful against power and you see that they are trying to innovate. and upgrade. upgrade new application available. that's what they are trying to do. and they want to outsmart us. they are really tireless in terms of the efforts that they are making to be able to achieve success. it is the only thing occupying their thoughts and their attention. so when you hear stories like this, you know it make sense. they are trying to think, if i was amongst the first, isis, and the taliban and using encrypted message is to avoid detection, that's why the intelligence as dana points out has to be even more strong and commendable and aggressive in terms of being able to get the information to anticipate and also to find out
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the connections, the relationships and the terror we web. >> greg: that's a weird thing. it's like in "the wall street journal" when they were talking about the two leaders were brothers recruited by another brother in isis, so you get criticized if you talk about looking at family. >> jesse: yes, these brothers are obviously evil men. isis is like an army of rats. they are always trying to burrow into your home. going into a different crevice, chewing through plaster, and then the civilized world is just trying to plug holes and play defense around the perimeter. that can only work for a certain amount of time. you have to think creatively and anticipate what they are going to do next. president trump did that with the travel ban. president obama used tools like drones, focused on rhetoric. president trump is very creative. he had get mauled, forced interrogation. so right now we need to be thinking one step ahead, because you are right. you are not going to win by putting bullets in heads. although trump is doing that
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pretty effectively in syria right now. that's why they are dissipating and screaming up with the other crazy ideas. but you're going to have to like the president said in saudi arabia, drive them out. not just physically, but the ideology. the ideology, radical islam is motivated by death. when you take that motivation away, you can crush it. but until you list the rest of the muslim society, you will not win. >> dana: keep them busy. make them always worry that they are about to get caught. >> greg: it is not if, it is one. four decades after the rest of the serial killer, tv networks are giving airtime to david berkowitz. should they? it i
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>> kimberly: the serial killer known as son of sam terrorizing new york city, six people in a string of knife shootings before he was arrested 40 years ago today. and now in a rare interview from behind bars. if david berkowitz opens up about his terrifying killing spree. >> people would never understand where i came from, no matter how much i tried to explain it to pray that not understand what it was to walk in darkness. i've been locked up since the time of my arrest just under 40 years prior >> you just turned 64? >> yes, i just turned 64. >> what would you tell 23-year-old david berkowitz today? >> turn around because it is too late. destruction is coming. as far as i am concerned, that was not me. that was not me. the name, i hate that name. i despise that name. the moniker. son of sam. that was a demon.
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>> kimberly: in light of the new sit down, should media organizations give airtime to serial killers? greg you are shaking furiously. >> greg: we just raise the question about playing the tape so that we could play the tape, let's be honest about that. we just did what we are questioning not to do. whether it is isis, teenage suicide, mass shootings. we know that actions are influenced by the spotlight. creating exposure. there is an amazing study, and you read this with the book "influence." after a well-publicized suicide in a community, a dramatic increase in single person auto crashes and plane crashes. suicide when publicized is contagious. people think about these things. when you expose a certain kind of thing that creates notoriety or attention, especially to young people like mass shootings, you will get replication. and you know how i feel about this.
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he made be contrite, but he does not deserve the spotlight. >> dana: there was such a rare thing in the book. i remember saying, how could this actually happen. but proving. >> greg: three fold in plane crashes. >> dana: and the netflix movie called "13 reasons why." i did not see it. is it better to talk about it or is talking about him leaving tomorrow with the young people? interesting thing, is there a place for redemption? i think that the lord would say, yes, so i guess the media talking about it helps prevent somebody from going down that path, perhaps, but i would be curious from your standpoint and law enforcement, do you think this makes a difference worse, better? >> kimberly: i have mixed feelings and emotions on it, because i think it is an important way to identify and pointed out, call it what it is. so obviously there is going to be public attention and curiosity towards us. it is a huge crime story.
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and everything especially at the time. detective joe coffee was on the case. s-uppercase-letter's soul. and you see a guy like this who has committed horrific crimes, of course you do not want anybody to be encouraged by this. he reported out there like you said. like the show's coming in movies. like teen suicides. but i think the truth and getting the story out there is important. and it is worthwhile. >> jesse: there is an old saying in television, if it bleeds, it leads. sells, but death and destruction cells as well. sitting down with a serial killer is -- i understand your point you do not want to glamorize the maniacs, but there is a public certain past, i think. but we show on this network the planes going into the world trade center. we do it once a year out of respect for it but it's to
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remind the public that the enemy we face and what we are fighting for. of charles manson sat down in front of cameras. to a certain extent that generation and the apostrophes 60s was a wake-up call to see him and to see what he did and why he did that. in modern, if he had been captured alive and to network lookers would be ready. once in a while, we need to see the face of evil. and we need to look evil in the eye, because without evil, you do not have good. you need the juxtaposition. so once in a while, you have to recognize evil for what it is pretty so that you understand who you are is a civilized society. >> mo: also a big difference with this study is a retrospective 40 years later, it's going to be more holistic, sitting down with some of the victims. then when you see a mad media rushed to cover these types of incidents in real time. when they are glorifying the
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suspect or the recently caught the culprit in real time, oftentimes at the expense of the victims, that is a very different, much, that speaks much more to your concern, greg. i am also mixed emotions on the special, but i like that they will be sitting down with the victims and it does raise the question. >> kimberly: something to study and get some insight into the criminal mind. how it is said to you just so viciously crossed over into becoming a monster like this. when we come back, the hollywood maker star says that he has president obama's blessing to play him in a movie. we will find out who it is next. stay with us. ♪ who are these people?
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♪ >> mo: he was a successful rapper before shooting to fame as "fresh prince of bel air." by the hollywood lister will smith may be gearing up for his biggest flow yet. take a look. >> has anybody said to you, would you play barack obama in a movie? so many must have called you about it.
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>> yes, i've talked to barack obama about it. >> what did he say? >> he said he felt confident that i had the ears for the role. [laughter] >> mo: there you have it. greg. are you feeling it? >> greg: i think that president obama should play will smith playing obama. i think that would be a good twist. but i want to know who will play obama as the child in kenya. that is a joke, america. we will be right back. it was a joke. we can all laugh at ourselves. >> kimberly: yes. >> dana: i think he would be a good choice. but like nails on a chalkboard when he calls him barack, by his first name, and it is the president, always and forever. >> greg: they are buddies. i was telling donald out the other day. >> dana: i bet that jesse did. [laughter]
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>> mo: through the end of the administration, who plays traum trauma? >> jesse: i want to know who plays reverend wright? who can win? how does he get into character? does he practice bowing? i think the obama movie would be similar to the presidency. to the press would love it, it would bomb at the box office. and then he will blame bush. [laughter] >> kimberly: you just have to go and laugh, we have very little time. otherwise, what jesse says, the waterfall. what can we do to save you from the pink coat over there? i think that they are friends. he knows him. he would probably play him quite well. i'm sure it -- and he is a very good actor. >> dana: who will play michelle obama? everybody will want that role.
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>> kimberly: beyonce. >> dana: yeah, good choice. >> kimberly: that would be nice, when an end? i don't think she would disapprove. >> jesse: who will play joe batten? >> greg: adam sandler. >> dana: what do you think about it? >> mo: i am a big fan. i think will smith is a great actor. michelle obama said if she had her choice it would be will smith or denzel washington. >> kimberly: kerry washington would be good as michelle obama. >> mo: i would wait a little while. it doesn't sound like they are making it. but -- >> kimberly: will smith's best movie? i have my answer. "bad boys." i love that one! >> jesse: yes, we need to bring back martin. what is so funny? you guys don't like martin?
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♪ >> jesse: time now for "one more thing," i will go first. a brush with death in poland. watch this crazy video. cars driving, train tracks, here they come. well one! just missed the train!
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so basically what happened was, you know what, they find the driver after almost a dying, there it is. just missed it! that was in poland, this happen. crazy, you guys have to be careful. >> dana: where do you find things like this? >> jesse: the producers. >> kimberly: let's be honest. you mean versus do your job? >> jesse: we are going to kill your "one more thing." >> greg: i will plug my podcast. foxnewspodcast.com. owning the legendary comedy club, we talked about politics, conservatives in comedy and the era of trump. it is really good. only like 25 minutes. you will not miss it. >> jesse: gregg's wishes do come true! 40 years later. so i'm standing out, you know, where i live. and this happens. look at this. there is the guy with a hand
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truck and the box falls off filled with pop rocks and popcorn. if i was ten years old, this would have been like a dream come true. that scene and animal house where the woman flies through the window and says, thank you, god. it was insane. but i am 52. so anyways, i'm yelling at the dude with the truck, but everybody has earbuds in, so he walks. he walks with the truck, left this giant box. i ran out into the street, grafted, took it back. and i held on and i was going, look at all of these pop rocks. it is the strangest story ever. i look at the address. and it belongs to a restaurant of a guy that i am meeting in 1. it is the most insane story eve ever. it was an iced ice cream place called odd fellows, and i am meeting him about a boiler. >> jesse: wow, that's really
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ends well. >> greg: is a great ice cream store, on spring and lafayette in soho. >> dana: you put pop rocks in the ice cream? >> greg: yes, you can. i did not steal one bag. it was huge. and the chef came and -- >> dana: wanted to give it to your girls? >> jesse: yes, they are very healthy for you. >> greg: dreams come true. >> kimberly: why don't you get in a bathtub with a bunch of coca-cola and some pop rocks? >> greg: why haven't i done into lately, you mean? >> jesse: it's about a dog. >> dana: it is about a dog. it is national spoil your dog day. that is every day at our house. we took jasper with us to lunch today. had a little bit of an update. remember i showed you last week when he had the collar on because i found the melanoma on his lip. he had to have surgery to make sure that they got clear margins. we had to weights all week for
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the results. peter called me and said, clean! that is a good update. >> kimberly: now greg needs a good report. furthermore, you think it might be precancerous. >> greg: boy, this is -- >> jesse: medical information on the air. kimberly guilfoyle. >> kimberly: i saved your life so that you could annoy me further. who wants the cat? perfect, it has been called a cat-tastrophe. a cats ran out in front of the game, the feisty little thing running out with the bases loaded, two outs, delaying the game briefly. the member of the cardinals ground crew came out and scare the cat. the animal tried to bite and scratch him. but he does not have rabies, so it is okay. i wanted to give you that
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important medical update. while, what do you mean. they call him rally cat, isn't that cute? the next page, that was a grand grandson. that's true. >> mo: here's a little bit of a rant, so i am a former communications rector for the democratic national committee. and some of the criticism of the dnc in the last elections are legit, but somethings are ridiculous. folks from a group that was founded by bernie sanders are accusing the dnc of being arrogant and pompous, why? over doughnuts. last month this group, the coalition protested outside the dnc. and dnc staffers came out and offer them doughnuts and water, nice, right? not according to turner, the president who wrote an email saying it was condescending and that the dnc was trying to seduce them with doughnuts and
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water. >> dana: an easy date. it depends on the doughnut. >> mo: i want us all same. >> bret: this is a fox news alert. president trump says he would like to "denuke" the world. good evening. i am bret baier. we are coming to live tonight from chicago, city dealing with the crime wave and more than 400 murders already this year. we will have to report about that, and i will talk with chicago's former police superintendent. first, will promote working vacation in bedminster new jersey after meeting with his vice president that afternoon, president trump took ample of questions from reporters and made some news. the president was not finished. after meeting with his national security team, the president essentially

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